Nancy Pearl Popular Books

Nancy Pearl Biography & Facts

Nancy Pearl (born January 12, 1945) is an American librarian, best-selling author, literary critic and the former Executive Director of the Washington Center for the Book at Seattle Public Library. Her prolific reading and her knowledge of books and literature first made her locally famous in Seattle, Washington, where she regularly appears on public radio recommending books. She achieved broader fame with Book Lust, her 2003 guide to good reading. Pearl was named 2011 Librarian of the Year by Library Journal. She is also the author of a novel and a memoir. Life Nancy Pearl was raised in Detroit, Michigan and, by her own account, spent much time of her childhood at the public library. Her decision to become a librarian started at the age of 10 with the inspiration of the children's librarian at her local public library. She credits books and librarians with helping her through a difficult childhood: "It's not too much of an exaggeration—if it's one at all—to say that reading saved my life." She earned her master's in library science at the University of Michigan (1967) and became a children's librarian in her hometown library system before moving on to other libraries. As a hobby, Pearl wrote poetry as a young woman and in 1980 published a story in Redbook magazine called "The Ride to School." Pearl moved with her husband, professor Joe Pearl, from Detroit to Oklahoma, where she raised two daughters (Eily Raman and Katie) while earning another master's degree, this one in history. She worked in an independent bookstore, Yorktown Alley as well as the Tulsa City-County Library System. Craig Buthod, who worked with Pearl in Tulsa before he became the deputy director of the Seattle Public Library, recruited her to come to Seattle in 1993. She originally traveled to Seattle without her husband for four years, until he reached retirement age and joined her. Pearl said the decision to join the library was one of the few times in her life when she instinctively knew she was doing the right thing. In Seattle, she became something of a local celebrity, founding the pioneering and much-imitated "If All Seattle Read The Same Book" project, encouraging every adult and every adolescent in the city to read the same book at the same time. The project, initially funded by a grant from the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund, was subsequently adopted by a number of cities, including Chicago, Buffalo and Rochester. Pearl appeared regularly on KUOW public radio to review and recommend books. While there she first came up with her "Rule of 50" to read a book's first 50 pages before deciding if you were interested enough to finish it or uninterested enough to quit. She later became the executive director of the library system's Washington Center for the Book. She has also taught a readers' advisory course at the University of Washington Information School called "Book Lust 101." Writing career Pearl achieved broader fame with Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment and Reason (2003), her readers' advisory guide to good reading. More Book Lust (2005), with the same subtitle, received much acclaim ("a sprightly follow-up") and was chosen by the Today Show as one of its book-club selections. In March 2007, Pearl released a book of recommendations for children and teens titled Book Crush. Pearl is also the author of the novel George & Lizzie and The Writer's Library, co-written with Jeff Schwager, which contains interviews with 23 American authors, including Pulitzer Prize-winners Michael Chabon, Jennifer Egan, Louise Erdrich, Richard Ford, Andrew Sean Greer, Viet Thanh Nguyen, and Donna Tartt. Editing career In January 2012, Amazon.com announced that it would publish a number of out-of-print titles recommended by Pearl, in a venture called Book Lust Rediscoveries. Approximately six novels, originally published between 1960 and 2000, will be published each year in various print and electronic formats. For each title, Pearl will provide an introduction, book discussion points and suggestions for further reading. "Amazon just blew me, my agent – both of us – away with their enthusiasm for doing something so wonderful as resurrecting books that never should have gone out of print in the first place," Pearl said on National Public Radio's Morning Edition. Although 20 traditional publishers had turned down Pearl's proposal for the rediscoveries, Amazon's agreement to re-issue the titles set off an intense negative response. "I knew the minute I signed the contract that there would be people who would not be happy, but the vehemence surprised me," Pearl told The New York Times in February 2012. "I understand and sympathize with the concerns about Amazon's role in the world of books. If I had to do this deal all over again ... well, it's a hard question. But I would still want these books back in print." Others applauded Pearl for rescuing beloved, out of print books, including two by American novelist and short-story writer Elizabeth Savage who'd once written "It is very dangerous to get caught without something to read"—a favorite line of Pearl's. Savage's novels, The Last Night at the Ritz and The Girls from the Five Great Valleys, now appear under the Book Lust label. Recognition and awards Pearl has had her face on an American Library Association poster and has received numerous awards. Her book reviews appear in The Seattle Times, Booklist, Library Journal, and on the radio on KUOW-FM Seattle, and KWGS Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 2003 she received an unusual honor when the Seattle-based company Accoutrements created a librarian action figure in her likeness to be sold in their Seattle store, Archie McPhee. Featuring Pearl with a stack of books and a finger to her lips, the doll's "push to shush" action was popular with some librarians and dismaying to others who felt that the doll reinforced librarian stereotypes. Pearl herself said that the shushing aspect of the action figure would determine "which librarians have a sense of humor." A tribute band called 'The Nancy Pearls' gave their debut bluegrass performance on the Mitchell Library rooftop (Sydney, Australia) on December 17, 2004. Awards 1997 Open Book Award from the Pacific Northwest Writers Conference 1998 Totem Business and Professional Women's "Woman of Achievement Award" Library Journal's Fiction Reviewer of the Year (1998) Allie Beth Martin Award from the Public Library Association (2001) Washington (State) Humanities Award (2003) 2004 Brava Award from Women's University Club in Seattle, recognizing "women of exceptional ability in the greater Seattle area"; Louis Shores—Greenwood Publishing Group Award, 2004 for excellence in book reviewing Annual award from the Women's National Book Association (2004–2005) Ontario Library Association Media and Communications Award (2004) 2011 Library Journal Librarian of the Year 2021 National Book Award Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Commun.... Discover the Nancy Pearl popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Nancy Pearl books.

Best Seller Nancy Pearl Books of 2024

  • George and Lizzie synopsis, comments

    George and Lizzie

    Nancy Pearl

    From “America’s librarian” and NPR books commentator Nancy Pearl comes an emotional, “AnneTyleresque” (Library Journal) debut novel about an unlikely marriage at a crossroads.Georg...

  • This Is What a Librarian Looks Like synopsis, comments

    This Is What a Librarian Looks Like

    Kyle Cassidy

    In 2014, author and photographer Kyle Cassidy published a photo essay on Slate.com called "This is What A Librarian Looks Like," a montage of portraits and a tribute to librarians....

  • Lights Out Liverpool synopsis, comments

    Lights Out Liverpool

    Maureen Lee

    Number One bestseller Maureen Lee's first novel of the hugely popular Pearl Street series.'With her talent for storytelling, queen of sagawriting Maureen Lee weaves intrigue, love ...

  • 9000 Miles in a Knight synopsis, comments

    9000 Miles in a Knight

    Pearl Hugunin Machenry & Nancy Pearl Lang

    9000 Miles In A Knight relates the experience of Pearl MacHenry on her family's road trip across America in 1930. Pearl, her husband Rev. Ward MacHenry, and their four youngest c...

  • Oblivion synopsis, comments

    Oblivion

    Peter Abrahams

    Nick Petrov was a worldfamous private investigator until a brain trauma destroyed part of his memory and changed who he is forever.Now a killer is on the loose, looming up from a ...

  • Violet and the Pearl of the Orient synopsis, comments

    Violet and the Pearl of the Orient

    Harriet Whitehorn & Becka Moor

    Meet Violet RemyRobinson, an amateur Sherlock Holmes in the making... When a new family move in next door, Violet is sure there's something strange about them. Then her eccentric, ...

  • Bodily Harm synopsis, comments

    Bodily Harm

    Robert Dugoni

    New York Times bestselling author Robert Dugoni returns with his most exhilarating legal thriller to date, a pulsepounding story of corporate greed, espionage, and the lengths one ...

  • 1947 synopsis, comments

    1947

    Elisabeth Åsbrink & Fiona Graham

    “One of the best books, certainly the best nonfiction book, that I've read recently.” Nancy Pearl on NPR’s Morning Edition  “An extraordinary achievement.” New ...

  • Classic Stories of World War II synopsis, comments

    Classic Stories of World War II

    Pyramid

    Classic Stories of World War II is a collection of fiction and nonfiction excerpts from the works of worldclass authors who lived through the conflict. Authentic and impassioned st...

  • Three Things About Elsie synopsis, comments

    Three Things About Elsie

    Joanna Cannon

    The bestselling author of The Trouble with Goats and Sheep delivers a suspenseful and emotionally satisfying novel “infused with warmth and humor” (People) about a lifelong friend...